GNDU B.Com (Bachelor of Commerce)

Guru Nanak Dev University B.Com — semester-wise notes, key topics, important questions and free practice quizzes (with AI analysis) for every paper.

Notice Board GNDU Entrance Prep

24 chapters · summary, key points, important questions and a practice quiz with AI diagnosis for each.

Chapter 1: Financial Accounting: Introduction, Nature & the Double-Entry System

Summary

Financial accounting is the systematic process of identifying, recording, classifying, summarising and communicating the financial transactions of a business so that interested parties can judge its performance and position. Its core objects are to maintain a permanent record of dealings, ascertain profit or loss through the Trading and Profit & Loss Account, reveal financial position through the Balance Sheet, and provide information for decision-making. Its scope covers book-keeping, preparation of final accounts and their interpretation, but it is historical in nature and ignores price-level changes and non-monetary factors, which are its chief limitations. The foundation of modern accounting is the double-entry system, which recognises that every transaction has two aspects of equal value: a debit and a credit. For every debit there is a corresponding credit, keeping the accounting equation Assets = Liabilities + Capital permanently in balance. The traditional rules classify accounts as personal (debit the receiver, credit the giver), real (debit what comes in, credit what goes out) and nominal (debit expenses and losses, credit incomes and gains). Double entry gives arithmetical accuracy through the trial balance, prevents and detects fraud, and yields complete results, though it demands skilled labour and is comparatively costly to maintain.

Meaning, nature and scope of accountingObjects and advantagesLimitations of financial accountingDouble-entry system: meaning and rulesAdvantages and disadvantages of double entryClassification of accounts

Key terms

Double-entry system
A method recording the dual aspect of every transaction, with equal debit and credit, keeping the books in balance.
Accounting equation
Assets = Liabilities + Capital; the identity that double entry always preserves.
Personal account
An account of a person, firm or institution; rule: debit the receiver, credit the giver.
Real account
An account of an asset or property; rule: debit what comes in, credit what goes out.
Nominal account
An account of expenses, losses, incomes or gains; rule: debit all expenses/losses, credit all incomes/gains.
Trial balance
A statement of debit and credit balances proving the arithmetical accuracy of the ledger.

Important questions

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GNDU B.Com — Financial Accounting: Introduction, Nature & the Double-Entry System (Practice Quiz)

10 Qs · ~10 min